An attempt to understand Canada's inheritance tax backlash: Don Pittis - Action News
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An attempt to understand Canada's inheritance tax backlash: Don Pittis

A think-tank's proposal to raise Canadian inheritance tax from zero up to levels in other developed countries sparked a strong reaction. The reasons may not be simple.

Roar of objections to imposing death duties on Canadians may have complex roots

It's tricky to escape death and taxes when passing on the cottage to the grandchildren, even though Canada has no estate tax. (Submitted by Christine Brown)

Anyone who thinks the CBCdoes not serve conservative-leaning Canadiansshould look at the comments for a recent online story aboutinheritance taxes.

The article was based on a report about the wide gulf between rich and poor issuedby theleft-leaning Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives think-tank. The report suggested the lackof an inheritance tax in this country makes inequality worse.

Other countries, including Britain and the United States, have 40 per cent inheritance taxes that kick in if people are rich enough. In the U.S., you have to have about $11 millionwhen you die for your estate to pay death duties.

Death and no taxes

Canada used to have an inheritance tax, but as of1972 the Canadian death duty rate dropped to zero.

Of course, that's not the whole story (more on that in a bit). But the really interesting thing was the reaction to the think-tank's proposalthat estates worth more than $5 millionbe subject toa 45 per cent tax.

Of the roughly 3,000people who commented, a large number and generally the most strident voices condemned the idea. Many Twitter responses didso as well.

Mark Scott, for example, tweeted that he would leave Canada if such a tax were ever applied.

Depending on your religious views, you really do have to depart if just to the Great Beyond in order to pay death duties.

But if you do decide toleave Canada before you die, choose your country wisely. The U.S.isn't the only place to have an inheritance tax. Most rich countries have one, or like Canada, something roughly equivalent. Japan takes half.Tax havens such as the Channel Islands and theCaymansare among the few safe spots.

Unlike in so many other cases, the usual warning that if Canada doesn't do the same as the U.S., rich Canadians will take their moneybagsand head south, does not apply.

Lucky topay high taxes

Perhaps more interesting was the angry reaction from people who probably have little prospect ofbeingaffected by the hypothetical tax anyway. It'shard to imagine all the comments at the bottom of the inheritance story were from the richest group of Canadians known as the "one per cent," or even from the "10 per cent."

Instead, the tone is very much Joe and Josephine Canadian. And as that inheritance reportpoints out, the vast majority of Canadians can never aspire to pay death duties. They should be so lucky!

As the article reminds us, half of all Canadian families have net assets worth less than $300,000. Even the relatively well-off, with say, a paid-off home in Vancouver and a million dollar retirement nest egg, won'tpass the $5-million threshold.

So why the backlash? According toresearch in the U.S. by scholar Dianna Muntz, the main cause of conservative angerthat fired up working-class supporters of Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential election was status threat.

It wasn't so much that people were poorer, although they may have been, but that they were afraid that they were losing what they had, "a sense that white Americans are under siege by these engines of change," wrote Muntz.

Man on horse wanted

And according to Canadian data from EkosResearchreleased earlier this year, asimilar kind of populist backlash seems to be brewing here inCanada.Last Friday's report on growing anger overillegalborder crossings seems to support the theory.

Ekosfounder and president Frank Graves says the rejection of inheritance tax is just one part of a wider phenomenon demonstrated in his polling. He pointed to the election of Doug Ford as premier in Ontario as an example of its impact. Most of Ford's supporters declared themselves to be working class.

When people feel threatened by change, he says, they don't necessarily look for logical solutions such as income redistribution from the very rich to people like them. Instead, the part of the collective personality that seeks strong leadership and order comes out.

"It looks for the man on the horse, the strong man," Graves says. "It also looks for decisive government action."

Research by Graves and others shows that under what some call "ordered populism," people turn against progressive action that they would have supported when they felt secure. That includessharing wealth through government transfers even if they would benefit. He says research shows that explaining the advantages of tax transfers to poorer people can make them change their position on such transfers.

As to solving inequality with inheritance taxes, the U.S and Britain, two of the most unequal of the rich countries, are hardly proof it works. Good public education for everyone has been shown to work better. And it makes a county richer in the long term.

And as for leaving Canada if it were to introduce death duties, it may not be worth your while. Under the tax provisions introduced in 1972, inheritance tax was cut to zero, but a provision on capital gains was added. Bringing back death duties would likely mean the two would beswitched againto avoid double taxation.

Right now, if you die at 85 and bequeath a cottage lot you bought for a few thousand bucks to the grandkids, you (or, rather, having passed on, your estate) must pretend you sold it at the $500,000 it is worth today, treat that notional increaseas capital gains and pay the appropriate tax. Same applies to other assets. And, sorry, no $5-million minimum.

So no, even in wonderful Canada, you can't escape death ortaxes.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis